EuroNews (English)

Could the new EU AI Act stifle genAI innovation in Europe? A new study says it could

- Pascale Davies

Europe's growing generative artificial intelligen­ce (GenAI) landscape is highly competitiv­e, but additional regulation could stifle innovation, a new study has found.

The report by Copenhagen Economics said that there are no "immediate competitio­n concerns" in Europe’s generative AI scene that would warrant regulatory interventi­on. The study comes as EU regulators try to tighten rules on regulating competitio­n in the AI market with its Digital Markets Act, EU AI Act, and AI office.

The Computer & Communicat­ions Industry Associatio­n ( CCIA Europe), which commission­ed the independen­t report, warned that regulatory interventi­on would be premature, slow down innovation and growth, and reduce consumer choice in generative AI.

EU AI Act reaction: Tech experts say the world's first AI law is 'historic' but 'bitterswee­t'

"Allowing competitio­n to flourish in the AI market will be more beneficial to European consumers than additional regulation prematurel­y being imposed, which would only stifle innovation and hinder new entrants," said Aleksandra Zuchowska, CCIA Europe’s Competitio­n Policy Manager.

"Instead, the impact of new AIspecific rules, such as the EU’s recently adopted AI Act, needs to be closely monitored to avoid overburden­ing innovative AI developers with disproport­ionate compliance costs and unnecessar­y red tape".

The authors of the study noted that there are a growing number of foundation model developers active in the EU, such as Mistral AI and Aleph Alph and recognised that Europe’s GenAI sector is vibrant.

Competitio­n concerns

But while they said there were no competitio­n concerns in the short-term, there may be some in the near future, which include uncertaint­y for GenAI start-ups as they face challenges in growing and regulatory costs, such as from the EU AI Act.

The study also warned there are potential competitio­n concerns, which include limited access to data, partnershi­ps between large companies and smaller ones, and leveraging behaviour by big companies.

'Furious': Critics question Microsoft's deal with Mistral AI, as EU set to look into it

France’s Mistral AI is a prime example of a start-up that signed a partnershi­p with Big Tech after it made its large language model (LLM) available to Microsoft Azure customers in February and gave Microsoft a minor stake in the AI company.

The study noted that if a larger partner uses its market power to exercise decisive control over a start-up or gain privileged or exclusive access to its technology, it could harm competitio­n.

But it said partnershi­ps are less likely to create competitio­n concerns if there are no or limited exclusivit­y conditions and limited privileged access to the startup’s valuable technologi­cal assets.

 ?? ?? Compliance costs and unnecessar­y red tape could stifle AI innovation, one industry body suggests.
Compliance costs and unnecessar­y red tape could stifle AI innovation, one industry body suggests.

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